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Original Article

Intraosseous BMP implants in rabbits Inhibitory effect on bone formation

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Pages 77-83 | Received 28 Feb 1998, Accepted 13 Oct 1998, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The bone harvest chamber is a model for rapid spontaneous bone healing in rabbits. We have previously shown inhibition of bone formation by using BMP-2 on a collagen carrier in this intraosseous model, despite bone formation when depositing BMP-2 on a similar carrier subfascially in the same animals. The doses were 12 and 0.6 μg/ 5 mm3 chamber volume. As these findings conflicted with most other experiments dealing with the skeletal response to BMP-2, we repeated the previous experiments with variations. We studied: 1) a lower BMP-2 dose, 2) a different type of BMP (BMP-7/OP-1), 3) a different carrier (hydroxyapatite), 4) a different chamber construction allowing contact with extraskeletal tissue and 5) BMP-2 on the original collagen carrier in an acutely inserted chamber in rats. We also studied the border between the BMP-2 implant and the preexisting bone to see whether BMP-2 caused pre mature differentiation of the callus so that proliferation was stopped and a bone cyst formed. The low dose of BMP-2 reduced tissue ingrowth and tended to reduce bone formation. BMP-7 showed the same inhibitory effects as BMP-2. BMP-2 on a hydroxyapatite carrier also inhibited bone formation in the chamber. In the chamber that allowed contact with extraskeletal tissue, we observed no effects of BMP-2. The border between the BMP-2 implant and the preexisting bone did not look like a cyst wall. BMP-2, from the same batch, on a similar collagen carrier, regularly increased bone formation in the acutely inserted bone chamber in rats, thereby excluding major defects in the BMP-2 implants. The inhibition in this specific model is a consistent finding and not due to an overdose, a specific BMP-type, a specific carrier or premature callus differentiation.

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